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18 October 2022 | Story Nombulelo Shange
UFS Womxn’s Forum
Kelebogile Olivier, Criminology Lecturer and UFS WF Secretary, Lutho Gwarubana, CAC (Central Act Committee) Member and Engineering Sciences student, and Nombulelo Shange, Sociology Lecturer

UFS Womxn’s Forum members recently came together to support the KovsieAct’s donation drive for the Jagersfontein Community. The handover took place took place at the KovsieAct office of the University of the Free State Bloemfontein on Thursday 13 October 2022. The Jagersfontein community recently experienced a series of natural disasters when two dams collapsed less than weeks apart in the month of September, flooding the community and engulfing people’s homes with sludge. The collapse, caused by a combination of harmful mining practices, poor government regulation and municipal negligence, caused many to lose their homes and livelihood.

KovsieAct has been running a collection drive on all three University of the Free State Campuses: the South Campus, Qwaqwa Campus and Bloemfontein Campus. UFS WF wanted to support this donation drive, because it is more than just a structure that organises around university work and projects; it is a structure that cares deeply for the community and the variety of social justice issues that oppress people of colour and womxn inside and outside of the UFS WF structure. The forum understands that to emancipate and empower those within their structure, they must empower the communities they come from first. especially when they are faced with challenges like ecological injustice, poverty, crime and violence; issues that disproportionally affect women and people of colour in South Africa and across the world.

Members of the forum came together, pulling together what little resources they have, as well as their time and passion, to run their own mini-donation drive. They were able to collect various homeware items, including pots, plates, cutlery and many other things. An ongoing knitting project that forms part of the forum, but that has participants who are both members and not members of the UFS WF, donated beautifully crafted artistic baby blankets and beanies for all ages. This project is led by UFS WF executive committee member, Nelia Oosthuysen, from the Office of International Affairs. Oosthuysen runs this project alongside the UFS’s remarkable and talented women, including Lourette Wilson, Yolanda Liebenberg, Zaynab Mobara and many others. Oosthuysen adds:

I run this project alongside the UFS Women’s Forum, as well as a few external remarkable and talented group of dedicated women who want to make a difference in the world! Our contribution is inspired by Mother Theresa’s work and her famous quote that says: “Charity isn't about pity; it is about love … Not all of us can do great things. But we can do small things with great love.”

Nelia Oosthuizen

Image above: Nelia Oosthuysen from the Office of the International Affairs and UFS WF Ex-Officio.

Geraldine Meyer and Oosthuysen show off some of the blankets

Image above: Geraldine Meyer and Oosthuysen show off some of the blankets

The donations were received by KovsieAct staff and Engineering Science student, Lutho Gwarubana, who works closely with the office and shared his deep concern for Jagersfontein both as a person who cares deeply about positive community upliftment and as an Engineering Science student. He believes professions such as his study area have an ethical, professional and social responsibility to ensure that their work takes place even in the most marginalised communities in order to improve lives, while also preventing similar disasters in the future. Gwarubana adds”

I think that the collaboration between KovsieACT and the UFS WF will have a good impact on the lives of individuals in the Jagersfontein community. As a young engineering student and member of KovsieACT, I hope to gain information that can help prevent such tragedies and be a beneficial impact in our community.   

Gwarubana’s desire to be in service of others is nurtured and guided by Teddy Sibiya, Senior Assistant Officer at Kovsie Support Services. Sibiya is leading the KovsieAct donation drive and was also there to accept the UFS WF donation. Sibiya added:

It is indeed a privilege to have organizations of this calibre at our university, with people who are prepared to give towards the active, civic, teaching mission and unselfish upliftment of our community. The UFS Womxn’s Forum, a foundation known for empowering communities in various ways, has once again proven its diligence in caring for the community when it donated towards the Jagersfontein relief. The collaboration of different organisations really allows the University he Free State to care for neighbouring communities.

 

News Archive

Head of SA Witness Protection Programme pays UFS a visit
2010-05-04

 
Receiving the Head of the South African Witness Protection Programme are, in front: Prof. Hennie Oosthuizen, Head of the Department of Criminal and Medical Law at the UFS; back: Adv. Beatri Kruger from the UFS Unit for Children’s Rights, Ms Lani Opperman, Member of the Free State Human Trafficking Forum (FHF), Adv. John Welch, Head of the Witness Protection Programme in South Africa; and Lene van Zyl, a LLM student at the UFS who is doing her thesis on human trafficking in body parts.
Photo: Leonie Bolleurs


Recently Adv. Beatri Kruger from the Unit for Children’s Rights in the Faculty of Law at the University of the Free State (UFS) invited Adv. John Welch, Head of the Witness Protection Programme in South Africa, to address the Free State Human Trafficking Forum (FHF) on the safe-keeping of victims who are witnesses against human traffickers.

Human trafficking is prevalent in the Free State, especially in Bloemfontein. The Unit for Children’s Rights is one of the founding members of the FHF that was established to take action against and fight the disturbing reality of human trafficking more efficiently.

According to Adv. Kruger the FHF identified the problem of trafficked witnesses being threatened by human trafficker syndicates.

Adv. Welch made some suggestions with regard to the safe-keeping of trafficked victims. He also, with some of the forum members, paid a visit to the areas in Bloemfontein where human trafficking is prevalent as well as to the local shelter for trafficked victims.

Adv. Welch undertook to join forces with the FHF in assisting trafficked victims and the local Witness Protection Programme Office is now a member of the forum.

Since December 2009 members of the FHF managed to disrupt the work of the human trafficking syndicates. “The traffickers have not stopped this inhumane practice but there are indications that they have moved to other buildings in the inner city and even to houses in the suburbs. It was reported to the forum that approximately 27 males suspected of being involved in human trafficking had been arrested, and since they are illegal in the country, they were deported to their countries of origin,” said Adv. Kruger.

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